The GED Program in the 21st Century: Working Together for a Brighter Future in Career and College Readiness National College Testing Association David.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
RIDE – Office of Special Populations
Advertisements

COMMON CORE The COMMON CORE state standards are a way to prepare students for the challenges of a constantly changing world – by learning the real-world.
GED 21 st Century Initiative NCTA Conference September 23, 2011.
Challenge to Lead Southern Regional Education Board Kentucky Challenge to Lead Goals for Education Kentucky is On the Move Progress Report 2008 Challenge.
Challenge to Lead Southern Regional Education Board Tennessee Challenge to Lead Goals for Education Tennessee is On the Move Progress Report 2008 Challenge.
Challenge to Lead Southern Regional Education Board Oklahoma Challenge to Lead Goals for Education Oklahoma is On the Move Progress Report 2008 Challenge.
Career and Technical Education in Minnesota Presentation to the Governor’s Workforce Development Council March 13, 2008 Minnesota Perkins State Career.
Ford Foundation Project: “Bridges to Opportunity - Postsecondary Access and Success for Low-Income Students.” Presented to House Higher Education Committee.
Loretta Costin, Chancellor Division of Career and Adult Education Florida Department of Education Learning Today, Earning Tomorrow Florida’s Vision For.
 align education/services to serve economic and community development  prepare the emerging workforce  offer portable skills and credentials to the.
Millions of adults need access to postsecondary education and training to advance their careers and support their families. National Necessity.
Missouri’s Workforce Performance Scorecard The 5000 Foot View.
Making the Case for Adult Learners James L. Applegate Senior Vice President.
The Educonomy: A Framework for Creating Complete Workforce Solutions July 10, 2009 Dr. Teresa Chasteen, President & CEO Worldwide Interactive Network (WIN)
STEM Education Reorganization April 3, STEM Reorganization: Background  The President has placed a very high priority on using government resources.
CTE Transformation Strategy U.S. Department of Education Office of Vocational and Adult Education September 15, 2011.
Sherry A. Key, Director Alabama State Department of Education Career and Technical Education Section Sherry A. Key, Director Alabama State Department of.
Jim Schoelkopf Reflect, Transform, Lead: A New Vision for Career Technical Education.
Carl D. Perkins Career and Technical Education Improvement Act of 2006.
Adult Education Career Pathways: A New Beginning.
Brought to you by your ACTEAZ. Everybody Is Talking About CTE  TIME Magazine  National Public Radio  USA Today: “About 31-35% of Americans graduate.
Colleges can provide all Washingtonians access to 2-year post secondary education Measures: Enrollments in community and technical colleges Rate of participation.
Leadership in Action: Tipping Points & Paradigm Shifts Indiana Adult Education Directors Meeting December 6 th, 2013.
By Reecie Stagnolia, Vice President for Adult Education Kentucky Council on Postsecondary Education March 10, 2015 Briefing on Kentucky’s Adult Education.
Adult Career Pathways Kick- Off Meeting October 7, 2014 Jolanta Conway State ABE Director Adult and Community Learning Services.
ABLE State Update Jeff Gove, State ABLE Director.
By Reecie Stagnolia, Vice President for Adult Education Kentucky Council on Postsecondary Education April 17, 2015 Briefing on Kentucky’s Adult Education.
Edward A. Shafer, Director, CTE Technical Assistance Center of New York,
CAREER PATHWAYS An Introductory Overview DEFINITION  A series of connected education and training programs and support services that enable individuals.
Pennsylvania’s 21 st Century Workforce Initiatives.
Breaking Through: Helping Low-Skilled Adults Enter and Succeed in College and Careers Jobs for the Future National Council for Workforce Education.
MEASURES OF COLLEGE AND CAREER READINESS AND SUCCESS July 16, 2013.
CCSSO National Conference on Student Assessment San Diego, California – June 23, 2015.
Department of Adult Education Clark County School District Dr. Robert Henry Director Jennifer Keiser Instructional Program Coordinator.
Understanding the NRS Rosemary Matt NYS Director of Accountability.
Superintendent’s Panel on Excellence in Adult Education.
1 GEDTS and Correctional Education: Working Together for a Better Future Correctional Education Association 2010 Leadership Forum March 29, 2010 Annapolis,
Adult Education: The Next Five Years Randy L. Whitfield, Ed.D. Basic Skills & Family Literacy Conference November 2009.
1. 2 Collaborative Partnerships It’s that evolution thing again! Adult education has been partnering and collaborating for years.
The Kentucky Career Pathways Initiative Oregon Pathways Academy II April 12, 2007 Shauna King-Simms Director, College and Career Transitions Kentucky Community.
Oregon’s Approach: Policies and Practices that Link Economic and Workforce Development NGA Policy Advisors Institute September 19, 2005.
Vision for Education in Tennessee Our Strategic Priorities ESEA Directors Institute Kathleen Airhart, Deputy Commissioner August 2014.
Transforming Michigan’s Adult Learning Infrastructure.
Molly Corbett Broad, President GED ® 21 st Century Initiative Hunt Institute & State Higher Education Executive Officers May 10, 2011 Chapel Hill, NC.
Workforce Skills Certificates: Enhancing Curriculum and Student Outcomes COABE 2007 National Conference March 27, 2007 Melissa Dayton, Adult Training and.
FY14 TCSG Adult Education Operations Meeting August 5-8, 2013.
FIFTH ANNUAL 50-STATE PROGRESS REPORT on the Alignment of High School Policies with the Demands of College and Careers 2010 Closing the Expectations Gap.
Student Success, Culture of Evidence: Adult Oregonians Without a High School Diploma.
A Call to Action for 2016 Student Success Anson Green Director Texas Workforce Commission November 17, 2016 WIOA UPDATE NOVEMBER 17,
1 Board “Leanings” on State Assessment System David T. Conley, Ph.D. Professor, University of Oregon Director, Center for Educational Policy Research CEO,
The Future of CTE February 18, Career Readiness Career Ready is Postsecondary Ready! 2/3 of all jobs will soon require postsecondary education or.
Kentucky’s New Assessment and Accountability System What to Expect for the First Release of Data.
Set background image for this slide to change picture. A range of photos are available in the graphics folder.
Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition Washington Basic Education.
System Performance Measures Committee Report Tom Zawacki Chair.
CAREER PATHWAYS THE NEW WAY OF DOING BUSINESS. Agenda for our Discussion Today we’ll discuss: Career Pathways Systems and Programs Where we’ve been and.
Perkins GSilverman 1 Nassau BOCES Perkins IV Consortium Meeting April 8, 2014: Reflection/Planning (Extension Year)
IS CTE THE NEW VOC ED? MI CAREER EDUCATION CONFERENCE FEBRUARY 2016.
5 Impacts and Solutions for Adult Educators.  Steven Covey – 7 Habits of Highly Effective People. Know where you are and where you want to be. With a.
Kathy Cooper Policy Associate, Adult Basic Education Washington State Board for Community & Technical Colleges 1.
AEBG Accountability Training
Changing Families for Generations MACAE Board
Brian Frazier Talent Investment Agency Office of Adult Education
Santa Ana College School of Continuing Education
Unpacking the Challenges in Designing and implementing integrated career pathways Tara Smith Texas Association for Literacy and Adult Education Conference.
The State of Adult Education in Georgia
Post-secondary Success for All: Increasing Awareness, Aspiration, Opportunity and Attainment A Vision for Redesigning Grades 11, 12, 13 and 14 in Minnesota.
NEW NEVADA LANDSCAPE Historically Significant Industries New Nevada Economy PRESENTER: Kris Nelson REALITIES….. Emphasized SHIFT.
Maine’s statewide workforce initiative
Basic Skills and Continuing Education: Working Together for the Future
Presentation transcript:

The GED Program in the 21st Century: Working Together for a Brighter Future in Career and College Readiness National College Testing Association David Espinoza, University of Oregon Martin Kehe, GED Testing Service

The Need for Adult and Postsecondary Education 30 million (~10% of the population) people over the age of 16 in the United States can barely read and write in English. An additional 60 million (~20% of the population) do not have adequate basic literacy skills for earning a living wage. Combined current funding supports instruction in basic literacy, ESL, adult secondary education, computer training, and vocational education for just 3 million adults. Source: 4

5 The Current Environment Economy uncertainty (lingering downturn) Globalization of the labor market Need for postsecondary training—correlating with employer demand for higher skill levels (READ: college & career readiness) Changing composition of the U.S. labor force

6 The GED Reality: The BIG Gap An estimated 39 million Americans lack a high school credential. Annually, 1.3 million U.S. students drop out of high school million of these Americans are age The GED Test serves only 778,000 test takers and only 493,000 receive credentials each year.

7 What We Need…Given The Realities A test that certifies preparedness An integrated approach in which testing is an important but transitional step Diagnostics and additional tools—to place candidates to produce the best outcomes Use of alternative delivery platforms to ease capacity/access issues Recognition that all of these things will take TIME to address effectively.

8 Adult and Postsecondary Education’s Needs Effective solutions to access challenges (shrinking budgets, maxed facilities and capacity issues) Better tools and systems to support the diverse needs of adult learners Greater understanding, awareness and action by Federal & State policy makers

To Content aligned to 1999 high school curriculum Passing standard empirically set based on norm-referenced performance of graduating high school seniors Non-standardized paper-based test delivery channel Few instructional programs that demonstrate significant promise in accelerating proficiency gains Few organizations recognized as leading the field Rigorous content aligned to Common Core college/career-ready curriculum Proficiency levels based on criterion- referenced performance standards for both high school and college/career readiness Standardized computer-based test delivery channel Instructional programs with evidence- based practices incorporating accelerated learning Champions and exemplary organizations leading the field From Our Vision for the Evolution of the GED Program 9

10 The GED 21 st Century Initiative: Primary Objectives To contribute significantly to the nation’s goal of significantly increasing postsecondary completion rates To increase access to and attainment of postsecondary education (PSE) credentials for non-traditional adult learners by: 1. Adopting a college/career-ready performance standard and creating an assessment and a credential that indicates readiness; 2. Facilitating the development of a stronger system of educational supports for GED candidates; and 3. Creating the PSE pathways that give meaning to a GED “college-/career-ready certification”

The GED 21 st Century Initiative: Pathways Pathways to college/career-readiness and success AttractAccelerate Learning Demon- strate Connect Ongoing formative assessm ent Show Proficienc y on Next-Gen GED Test Entry into learning system Attain PSE & career attainme nt and beyond Pathway s to and supports for PSE & career Differen- tiated instruction Customiz ed curriculu m Learning Pre- assessm ent 11

Drivers & Realities Basic literacy High school diploma or equivalency credential College/career readiness Skills Next generation testing platform Instructional design and delivery Skills for employment Technology Comparability Measurement of outcomes Information 12

13 GED Target Adult Population Potential GED candidate population  Homeschooled (~0.24M)  US-born adults without a high school diploma or equivalent (~10M)  Foreign-born adults without a high school diploma or equivalent (~5M) % Foreign-born dropouts US-born dropouts 15 Million Home- schooled

The Truth About Proficiency Levels 14 Equivalent EFL levels EFL 6 EFL 5 EFL 4 EFL 3 and below

15 Tackling the Proficiency Gap College- and Career-ready proficiency level (target grade level proficiency) = Time investment for preparation (total prep time) X Multiplier for accelerating proficiency (grade level gain within total prep time) Target proficiencyProjected proficiency Starting proficiency level (current grade level proficiency) +

Accelerated Learning Given the realities of the proficiency gap our learners face, approaches to accelerated learning need to be researched and tested GEDTS plans to launch a series of pilots to employ and evaluate accelerated learning with adult test takers –Of varying ages –Of varying proficiency challenge levels –In varying learning environments –Encompassing varying learning technologies 16

The Near Term… The 2002 Series will remain in the market for the next three to five years During that time, however, we will be: 1.Developing content frameworks for the new test 2.Piloting Computer-based testing (CBT) 3.Piloting accelerated learning tools in varied settings 17

Transforming Our Reality 18

Laying the Groundwork for the Future Translating research into actionable changes to the existing curriculum Pilot instructional tools and processes “Test bed” for accelerated learning Skills Proactive policy initiatives Pilot CBT Pilot technology-based instructional tools Technology Research Pilot/implement data initiatives under consideration Tools to educate the lawmakers, policy makers and the general public Information 19

20 Ensuring Adult Learners are Career- and College-Ready The GEDTS Goal